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  • The Space Needle on a clear day in March. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle clear day
  • Part of the Seattle skyline and the Space Needle can be seen through the fog. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle Space Needle in the Fog
  • A nearly full moon is captured from Seattle’s Capitol Hill as it sinks into the morning light over the Olympic Mountains. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Full moon over the Olympic Mountains
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    A piece of the Kalakala
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Kalakala pieces in Kirkland
  • The Space Needle, rising behind one of the rides at Seattle Center, was designated a historic landmark in 1999. (Benjamin Benschneider / The Seattle Times, 1999).
    Historic landmark
  • The Space Needle is seen through the sculpture "Changing Form" by Doris Chase during twilight in Seattle. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle peek
  • Fireworks explode from the Space Needle as the clock strikes midnight on New Years Eve in Seattle, Thursday, December 31, 2015.<br />
<br />
Sy Bean / The Seattle Times
    Happy New Year Seattle, 2015
  • The Seattle Great Wheel located at the end of Pier 57. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle Great Wheel and Space Needle
  • A 35-foot-long French flag, specially made in Tukwila, flies at half-staff atop the Space Needle on Saturday. (Alan Berner / The Seattle Times).
    Seattle Space Needle and French flag
  • A super full moon rises over the Seattle skyline. (Bettina Hansen / The Seattle Times)
    Super Full Moon Rises Over Seattle
  • The Olympic Mountains loom behind the Space Needle in this telephoto view from Clyde Hill on the east side of Lake Washington. <br />
Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times
    Olympics Rising over Seattle
  • Looking a little like the tendons of heart valves, Pacific Science Center's arches bask in red light, with the Space Needle in the background. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Center of the center
  • A No. 24 flag atop the Space Needle honors Seattle Mariners great Ken Griffey Jr., who was elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    A No. 24 flag atop the Space Needle
  • The sun peeks through the Space Needle as it sets at Lake Union Park. (Lindsey Wasson / The Seattle Times)
    Sun and Needle
  • A total lunar eclipse rises behind the Space Needle. (Rod Mar / The Seattle Times, 2004)
    Dark side of the moon
  • The blue moon is seen above the Seattle skyline from Kerry Park on Queen Anne hill in Seattle on Friday, July 31, 2015. A blue moon occurs when there are two full moons in one month.<br />
<br />
Lindsey Wasson / The Seattle Times
    Once in a Blue Moon
  • The Space Needle is captured upside down in tiny raindrops on a window in downtown Seattle. The droplets act like wide-angle photographic lenses, inverting the images and distorting them as they run down the window. (Jimi Lott / The Seattle Times, 2005)
    Space Needle raindrops
  • Under cloudy skies, the Space Needle is viewed through a sculpture near the Experience Music Project on the Seattle Center grounds. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Space Needle reflection
  • The Space Needle is nearly the only structure visible along the Seattle skyline due to heavy fog. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times
    Space Needle in the Fog
  • Several hundred Star Wars fans gather underneath the Space Needle Saturday night to wage a lightsaber battle. The light saber battle coincided with the opening of "Star Wars: The Force Awakens."<br />
<br />
Sy Bean / The Seattle Times
    Sabers under the needle
  • The Space Needle commemorates the 10th anniversary of the Seattle World’s Fair. A brisk wind carries streams of downward-pointing white fountain fireworks. (Johnny Closs / The Seattle Times, 1972)
    Happy 10th!
  • With fine precision, the Eye of the Needle restaurant turntable went through a shakedown spin at the Western Gear Corp.'s Everett plant today. (Vic Condiotty / The Seattle Times, 1961)
    Eye of the Needle Restaurant turntable
  • The art-deco ferry Kalakala is seen on Puget Sound in the mid-1930s. Decades later it was a popular attraction during the 1962 Seattle World’s Fair. (Seattle Times Archives, 1936)
    Art Deco Kalakala
  • A sailboat aptly named Neptune's Car blends in with Elliott Bay's urban scenery, as viewed from West Seattle. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Sailing past Seattle's symbol
  • The Roll-O-Plane ride in the Seattle Center Fun Forest appeared to be whirling around the Space Needle in this unusual photograph. The ride was near the south side of the Food Circus in the amusement park. (Bruce McKim / The Seattle Times, 1964)
    Seattle Center Fun Forest Roll-O-Pla..ride
  • A view of The Seattle Space Needle in 1987. (Benjamin Benschneider / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle skyline
  • For the 1962 World’s Fair, a newcomer cropped up among the onion-shaped spires of St. Spiridon's Cathedral, a Russian Orthodox church. (Johnny Closs / The Seattle Times, 1973)
    Cascade neighborhood skyline
  • The Seattle Times World's Fair Souvenir Page (Sunday, April 8, 1962)
    Space Age Frontiers
  • The Seattle Times World's Fair Souvenir Page (Sunday, April 8, 1962)
    Modern Living
  • The Seattle Times World's Fair Souvenir Page (Sunday, April 8, 1962)
    Alaska | Land of breathtaking beauty
  • The Seattle Times World's Fair Souvenir Page (Sunday, April 8, 1962)
    Industrial Horizons
  • The Seattle Times World's Fair Souvenir Page (Sunday, April 8, 1962)
    Space Age Frontiers
  • The Seattle Times World's Fair Souvenir Page (Sunday, April 8, 1962)
    Beautiful British Columbia
  • The Seattle Times World's Fair Souvenir Page (Sunday, April 8, 1962)
    City of Tomorrow
  • Climate Pledge Arena aerial. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times, 2021)
    Climate Pledge Arena
  • The Space Needle stands tall in the sunshine before a dramatic backdrop of building cumulous clouds. (Peter Haley / The Seattle Times, 1983)
    Accumulating clouds
  • Sun washed the Space Needle and a popular Seattle Center ride as the Fun Forest swung into spring. (Larry Dion, The Seattle Times, 1975)
    Needle eyes fun lovers
  • Stratocumulus is the area's signature cloud. Thick and gray as wool socks. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times, 2002)
    Wrapped cozy in a shroud of cloud
  • The umbrellas are back out in Seattle, as a man passes "Changing Form," the Kerry Park sculpture by Doris Chase. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Shape shifter
  • The Space Needle and Mount Rainier dominated The skyline from Queen Anne Hill. Even Mount St. Helens, right, was visible. (Johnny Closs / The Seattle Times, 1963)
    On a clear day
  • Cold, clear weather, abetted by a double exposure, put the moon in line with the downtown area in this view from Queen Anne Hill. The moon, unusually clear because of the cold, and the cityscape were photographed separately with telephoto lenses. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times, 1979)
    A movable moon
  • On April 19, 1962 three German high-wire aerialists of the Circus Berlin's Zugspitz ladder act thrilled World's Fair workers by trying out their act high above the fairgrounds on a steel cable they had strung between the roof of the Memorial Stadium and a point 376 feet high on the Space Needle. Siegfried Cimarro, 30, of West Berlin drove a motorcycle with specially grooved wheels on the cable, to a 300-foot height while Rudi Berg, 32, of Essen and Peter Czaya, 25, of West Berlin rode on a steel-pipe stabilizing. (Seattle Times Archive, 1962)
    World's Fair Circus Berlin's Zugspit.. act
  • A crane moved into position to unload the second World's Fair Monorail train at Northern Pacific Railway's Terry Avenue freight station in 1962. (The Seattle Times)
    World's Fair Monorail train
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